How New is the "New Photojournalism?"

Abstract

This paper, of epistemological nature, seeks to analyze the idea of “new photojournalism”, concept that promoted more freedom to the press photographers by allowing the creation of photographic narratives onto photo stories, with the readings of authors like Fred Ritchin (2013), who contributes with the concept of “new photojournalism”, and André Rouillé (2009), who contributes with the concept of “dialogical photography”, “scripting of the photo story” and “humanist and humanitarian photojournalism”, concepts that is believed to be close to the idea of “new photojournalism”. Besides that, it’s intended to be compared to the theory of micro-story, developed by Carlo Ginzburg (2017) in Italy and studied by the Brazilian researcher Boris Kossoy (2014). The micro-stories concept basis is, mainly, the focus on the invisible classes, the intensive investigation of the object and a reduction of the analysis scale, from general to particular; these characteristics are similar to the concept of “new photojournalism” that we are studying. Even though is made on the research a historic panorama, the main idea is to study the “new photojournalism” in contemporaneity and investigate if it is possible to think about these terms in the same way as in the middle of the XX century, when publications like Life Magazine (1936-1972) were published. As an object to the analysis, it’s going to be studied the report by the Brazilian photographer Adriana Zehbrauskas about the Zika virus in Brazil published in The New York Times.

Presenters

Laura Duarte Uliana

Details

Presentation Type

Paper Presentation in a Themed Session

Theme

New Media, Technology and the Arts

KEYWORDS

Photojournalism, Photography, Media Studies

Digital Media

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